Yes you are right. But there is a much more important issue, the drying time, in other words after how long can the print be folded or foiled? The time thus shortened is the profit that Ink Saving programs give for sheetfed printing. And this is also significant.Ink reduction is not so important in commercial sheetfed work because the cost of ink is small relative to the other manufacturing costs of printing a job. There are other ways to reduce production costs as Alois pointed out.
Yes you are right. But there is a much more important issue, the drying time, in other words after how long can the print be folded or foiled? The time thus shortened is the profit that Ink Saving programs give for sheetfed printing. And this is also significant.
No, this is not an idea, it is practice. If you work in a printing house you experience this, But test how much faster a 260% TAC print dries than a 330% TAC. When foiling, you can’t use too much powder. Anyway, with a B1 sheetfed machine, the ink savings in one year are approx. $ 14,000 I do not remember exactly, but we measured the ink flow and the calculation of Alwan was very good.Do you have any data or studies that support that idea or are you speculating?
Ink Saving e.g. Alwan Dynamic Device Link Technology designed for magazines, and other 4colour publications. No effect on text, single color halftones. You can decrease ink film thickness and you are guaranteed to lose your customer.Gordo, Ergo as no idea of the what "Ink Saving" means regarding Ink Drying - 1) UV /EB Inks 2) Heatset/ Coldset 3) Oxidation Drying
How can you save Ink if you are just printing Text/Solids and single colour halftones as individual KCMY!
Regards Alois
No, this is not an idea, it is practice. If you work in a printing house you experience this, But test how much faster a 260% TAC print dries than a 330% TAC. When foiling, you can’t use too much powder. Anyway, with a B1 sheetfed machine, the ink savings in one year are approx. $ 14,000 I do not remember exactly, but we measured the ink flow and the calculation of Alwan was very good.
You don't have to, just have to think about it. But let's really finish. It's not worth that much. I’m past countless tests, I’ve only written in good faith and everything I have written works
Most coldset printers reseparate and I would speculate heatset printers as well. They do it primarily to bring files to a common CMYK condition and for ink savings. Ink is a major cost for heatset and coldset printers. Even small reductions can lead to millions of dollars in savings. For sheetfed, ink is not a significant cost relative to the value of the job. Also, unlike in publications work, incoming files tend to already have a common CMYK condition. So reseparation is not typical in sheetfed work.We are a printing company that mainly operates Heatset presses with various machines of 16 pages to 72 pages, we use Agfa's built-in Ink Save program for Heatset machines and Alwan for sheetfed machines. I have been using the Alwan software since 2005. A test was done 12 years ago where we printed the same pages on a Rotoman machine using Alwan and without Alwan. The result showed that Alwan’s calculation is good enough. Later, on a sheetfed machine, I calculated Alwan’s ink savings for a year. There was no significant amount, but the price of the software and upgrades paid off.
If by Hybrid screening you mean something like Agfa Sublima then you are using a conventional AM screen which, except for the 1%-2% dots, is identical to Agfa Balanced Screening.In response to your entry, we use a Hybrid screening for all presses.
Correct, and normal for AM screens.The color order when printing is KCMY (do not talk about Pantone colors). The ink thickness is the same on the sheet, of course, but due to the screening angle, as the image gets darker, the ink dots overlap on an ever-increasing surface.
Here you are referring to TAC (Total Area Coverage) i.e. the maximum percentages of ink in the darkest area of an image - not GCR.The first color is in direct contact with the paper, while the others are printed to the previous ink (or inks) layer, only a small area contacts with the paper. Enlarged black dots are applied directly to the paper, with the rest of the ink only partially. Therefore, it does not matter how much ink is stacked on a given surface, in what area.
These are two separate issues - TAC reduction and GCR. Alwan is probably doing both to your incoming files.I would rather say that with Alwan’s dynamic GCR method, the drying time decreases in the darker areas of the image, and plays a lesser role in lighter areas and midtones. But it is also the goal of reducing the amount of total imk in the dark area.
Totally agree.We are a production company where we face a lot of problems every day. We can’t do scientific research, but we solve problems somehow.
FM and DM screening is used to print millions of pages weekly on heatset and coldset presses and is a great complement to ink optimization systems such as the one you use.I really like the FM screening, we used it in my previous company, but only on Heatset machines which has a drying unit.
Gentlemen,
Ink saving cost software - is not of primary concern in Heatset Web Offset, what is though is the Energy Costs used by the Dryer to be had by
reducing IFT in the dense reproduction areas - by doing so it reduces costs. The gist of this conversation is saving money alone by Ink!, there are
many more ways of saving production costs.
Regards, Alois.
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